Advertisement
Advertise on the ComicSpace Network

7/30/2008

Bookstore signing report

Tim Broderick writes:

There’s a photo and a brief summary of the signing that featured Josh Elder, Chris Burnham, me (Tim Broderick), and Jeffrey Brown at timbroderick.net

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to our RSS feed!


7/28/2008

Incubus Tales begins fifth chapter, “Hey Nonny-Ah!”

Filed under: Adult Webcomics News @ 8:06 pm
hushicho writes:

The often satirical, tongue-in-cheek comic for adults Incubus Tales begins its fifth chapter on Tuesday, 29 July 2008. This particular storyline, entitled “Hey Nonny-Ah!”, takes a shot at popular literary fantasy conventions and, of course, includes the requisite sensuality and cheeky, fun, and sexy features that all fans of the comic have come to love. The comic may be found here.

Author and artist Hushicho hopes to gain even more fans for the series with this chapter, which is promised to be even more hilarious and scintillating than the ones previous. With such a rich stock of literary tradition from which to draw, how could it be anything but?

Incubus Tales has run steadily since October 2007, with a brief “break” between the previous chapter and that upcoming. Donations are accepted to assist the small studio Hushicho Pro, and the studio’s works are available through a shop on the main site, located at http://hushicho.captainn.net.

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to our RSS feed!


7/25/2008

MT Interview: Stephen Geigen-Miller and Patrick Heinicke

Filed under: General @ 12:46 pm
Shaenon writes:

Stephen Geigen-Miller is the co-creator (with Greg Beettam) of the quirky sci-fi adventure Xeno’s Arrow, available on Modern Tales Longplay (go read it now!). Now he and artist Patrick Heinicke are launching a new series on Modern Tales, Cold Iron Badge, which combines fairy-tale fantasy with police procedural. Stephen and Patrick were kind enough to let me talk to them about their new comic, which starts Monday on MT.

(more…)

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to our RSS feed!


7/24/2008

Aaron Diaz’s disfiguring bike wreck

Filed under: Link-Blogging @ 8:33 am
Eric Millikin writes:

Dresden Codak artist Aaron Diaz updates us on the latest battle in the War On Pavement:

So hey guys, yesterday I had a somewhat disfiguring bike wreck. I was riding home and my bike’s tire got stuck in a street car track and I flew face first into the pavement. I have a wicked gash on the left side of my mouth and face and my hands are pretty torn up … plus part of my computer (the one with the comics on it) that I was carrying broke. It’s going to be a while before I can use my hands again and make comics, so I am just letting folks know that there will be some delays.

Also I have no health insurance, which is awesome.

- Eric M.

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to our RSS feed!


7/16/2008

Looking up

Filed under: Share the Love @ 7:30 am
Tim Broderick writes:

Ursula Murray Husted recently finished her story “Looking up.” It’s a gem on the internet - a sweet story of a young couple facing tough times in their life in rural West Virginia, and everything seems to come to a head because of one very large hole in the ground.
I highly recommend it.

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to our RSS feed!


7/14/2008

“Will the New Yorker give equal time to unfair McCain smears?”

Filed under: General @ 8:42 pm
Eric Millikin writes:

I completely disagree with Eric Zorn of the Chicago Tribune when he writes:

The New Yorker maintains that the illustration on the cover of its current issue is meant to satirize, not spread, the smears and rumors about Sen. Barack Obama — that he is an unpatriotic Muslim with terrorist sympathies who hates the American flag..

I take the editors at their word and await the upcoming cover in which they give the same ha-ha-isn’t-it-silly? treatment to the rotten things people say about John McCain: Say a cartoon showing him looking about 150 years old and spouting demented non-sequiturs in the middle of a violent temper tantrum while, in the corner, his wife is passed out next to a bottle of pills.

It’s only satire, right?

No, not really.

See, John McCain isn’t just rumored to be seventy-some-years old, we have actual facts to support the asssertion that he is really old. Therefore, drawing him so that he looks old wouldn’t have anything to with a smear or a rumor. It would have to with what is known as a “fact.” It’s a fact we can actually measure based on the number of times the earth orbits the sun, which we have conveniently labeled “years.” Similarly, it isn’t just a rumor that McCain has angry outbursts or that his wife has been addicted to drugs. Those are facts. Yes, rarely reported facts, but facts nonetheless.

So why would we be equating facts about McCain with lies about Obama? Why would drawing a picture of an old man so that he looks like an old man be in any way equivalent to drawing a non-terrorist so that he looks like a terrorist?

There’s something ridiculous about our political discourse here, when telling basic facts about one candidate (his age) is viewed as soemhow the equivalent of telling complete lies about another (he’s a terrorist!) .

But back to the New Yorker cover. I’ve got sympathies for the artist because he has a difficult task here. In order to satirize something, you’ve got to take it over the top. This New Yorker cover merely repeats the smears and rumors about Sen. Barack Obama, and therefore it is indistinguishable from something you’d see from a right wing magazine. As Jonah Goldberg of the conservative National Review points out, “What I find interesting about the New Yorker cover is that it’s almost exactly the sort of cover you could expect to find on the front of National Review.” Granted when you’re dealing with right wing crazies it’s pretty difficult to out do them. You could try to draw a cartoon of Obama crashing a jet into the White House while eating babies and showing an in-flight movie where he and Rick Santorum star in a bestiality porn film with an endangered species of sea turtle, but you’d probably just be disappointed when you found that is the topic of next week’s edition of CNN anchor Glenn Beck’s radio show.

- Eric M.

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to our RSS feed!


7/9/2008

Submitted Without Comment (But a Tip of the Hat to Designer Paul Sizer)

Filed under: Business @ 9:04 am
Joey Manley writes:

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to our RSS feed!


7/5/2008

Rich Stevens and Meredith Gran at the Googleplex

Filed under: Webcomics (Non-MT) @ 9:42 pm
Joey Manley writes:

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to our RSS feed!


Wizard World Chicago

Tim Broderick writes:

I recap my experiences at Wizard World Chicago and Printer’s Row book fair over at Crimespree Magazine’s Blog. There’s a ton of links there to authors and comics creators. Jon and Ruth Jordan have a few comments as well.

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to our RSS feed!


6/30/2008

Comics for Comics: A Concert to Benefit the ToonSeum

Filed under: Events @ 9:46 am
Planet Saturday writes:

The ToonSeum is hosting its first annual Comics for Comics: A Concert to Benefit the ToonSeum. Join Pittsburgh’s cartooning elite in an evening of laughs with performances by editorial cartoonist Rob Rogers, emcee Bill Crawford, funnyman Buzz Nutley, and featuring Gene Collier. The event takes place on July 16th at 8pm at The Improv in Pittsburgh’s historic Waterfront. Tickets are $20, and are available from The Improv. The evening will also feature a silent art auction highlighting local and national cartoonists. Proceeds from the event and auction benefit the ToonSeum.

The ToonSeum is the first of its kind in the United States, combining exhibitions of original cartoon art with hands-on workshops and interactive displays geared towards children and adults alike. In its first year of operation, the museum has hosted groundbreaking exhibitions including Drawn in Black and White: Wee Pals and the Works of Morrie Turner, celebrating the art of a man once called the “Jackie Robinson of cartooning.” Other exhibitions have included Kidding Around: Children in Cartoons and Comics, and the upcoming Drawn to the Hive: Cartooning Pittsburgh’s Mayors. The museum also emphasizes the importance of offering unique programming for kids and adults. From Breakfast with Snoopy hosted by the Children’s Museum, to panel discussions featuring nationally acclaimed cartoonists, the ToonSeum offers something for everyone.

“Comics for Comics was inspired by a similar event benefiting the museum of cartoon art in San Francisco,” says Joe Wos, the founder and Executive Director of the ToonSeum. “With The Improv as our host and Gene Collier as our featured comedian, we are able to take it to a new level.”

Editorial cartoonist and Post Gazette contributor Rob Rogers will start the evening off with his signature performance of live cartooning. The event continues with stand-up comedians Bill Crawford and Buzz Nutley. Crawford is a Pittsburgh native and Improv regular. He is also a regular on-air guest of Pittsburgh’s 102.5 WDVE morning show. Buzz is a writer and performer and has opened for great acts such as Chris Rock and Bobcat Goldthwait.

Comics for Comics features the comedic stylings of Pittsburgh’s favorite sports columnist Gene Collier. Gene Collier has been writing sports and political columns for the Post-Gazette since dinosaurs roamed the earth. He is co-author with Rob Zellers of “The Chief,” the Pittsburgh Public Theatre’s oft-running hit based on the life of Steelers founder Art Rooney. Against sincere advice, he persists as well at his moonlight career as a stand-up comic.

Comics for Comics, a comedy concert benefiting the ToonSeum is being produced by Gerry Collier, with associate producer Erica Kast. The event is sponsored by National City.

Join us for an evening of laughter and cartooning on Wednesday, July 16th at 8pm at The Improv, 166 E. Bridge St. at the Stacks at the Waterfront. Tickets for Comics for Comics are $20 and are available from www.improv.com or by calling (412)462-5233. For more information about the ToonSeum or this event, visit www.toonseum.org, e-mail erica@toonseum.org, or call (412)325-1060.

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to our RSS feed!


6/24/2008

On the Hero by Night Fiasco

Filed under: Business @ 8:13 am
Joey Manley writes:

Signing a Work for Hire contract for your own original creation is like getting a new credit card. It feels like easy money until it doesn’t.

Commercially developing your own creation without giving up ownership of it it is like opening up a savings account. It’s a slow, sometimes agonizing, process, and will probably never amount to much money at all. But it’s always there.

I’m not a comics creator, but I make websites, which are creations of a sort, and I’ve had the opportunity to do both of the above in the past few years. I’ve actually done something completely different — giving up some of my ownership to Josh, first, then collectively giving up a smaller amount of ownership to some investors, in hopes that, with all of those resources combined, we can accomplish more than any of us could alone. I am confident it will work out, but nothing is guaranteed.

The business of comics is hard. The business of anything is hard. Anybody who tells you that they have the perfect answer to making a living in comics, or in webcomics, is fooling themselves, or lying to you. Personally, I figure that most of the publishers who have gotten into trouble over the years are more in the “fooling themselves” camp than otherwise. You’ve got to assume that the most money-minded of the money-minded scumbags are less likely to get into the comics industry than they are to go into, say, the drug-dealing industry, or the oil industry, or whatever. Comics hasn’t been known for minting very many billionaires in the past few decades — so why would the sleaziest of the sleazy even bother? Anti-publisher rhetoric notwithstanding, almost anybody working in the comics industry in any capacity could probably be making a lot more money doing something else — anything else. For this reason, I tend to give everybody in comics the benefit of a doubt.

There are exceptions.

And that’s pretty much all I have to say about this.

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to our RSS feed!


6/6/2008

Kudos Majorissmo for Skin Deep

Filed under: WCN News @ 8:51 am
WebcomicsNation writes:

Tim Stump has just posted a new review of Skin Deep (By Kory Bingaman) at Webcomics Nation:

Skin Deep was the second webcomic I looked at on WCN and it totaly got me into the medium. The artwork is awesome with a capital AWE! It can be cute at times and then totaly serious. The characters are fun and ferequently hilarious. And the story is intriguing as hells. Its been a year and I still check every day to see what will happen next. better than a movie! (especially today's movies.)

All in all it rates a "OMG that is so cool!" with me. may it go on for years to come.

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to our RSS feed!


Discover John’s genius

Filed under: WCN News @ 8:51 am
WebcomicsNation writes:

Stan Yan has just posted a new review of Nonsequiteria (by John P) at Webcomics Nation:

It's not often that you get to look through an artist's sketchbook, but when you do, it can often tell you more about the artist than his finished works.  Nonsequiteria is a perfect example of that.  With this random (and extremely small) sampling of John's drawings and short stories we get to see his creative mind at work.  The unfinished pencil sketches are among my favorites.  If this group of drawings inspires you at all, do yourself a favor and check out his other comics and webcomics too.  Your life will be more complete for it.

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to our RSS feed!


Refreshingly Satisfying

Filed under: WCN News @ 8:51 am
WebcomicsNation writes:

Tim Patten has just posted a new review of Bellen! (by box brown) at Webcomics Nation:

You have to love Bellen, the wit, the characters you grow to love, the art which just always gets better and better, and of course, that pinch that always wants you to come back for more! I've read every Bellen now, and I must say that the quality of it never goes down, if anything it goes up. The origanal art of Bellen is fantastic, and one I would really reccommend. With the quality as it is. No wonder it is the 9th most popular webcomic here.

 I love the fact that their characters personality's never change, Ben is this whiny,  sort of pseudointellectual character, but cares very deeply for Ellen, and is rather shy and insecure. Meanwhile Ellen is a fun, full of life character, very sure of herself, but nevertheless adores Ben. So really, they are oppisites, but very good oppisites! They match each-other perfectly and it makes you go "aah" after each story.

 Good quality fun, Bellen

 

Tim Patten 

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to our RSS feed!


Hard Boiled Comic with Heart

Filed under: WCN News @ 8:50 am
WebcomicsNation writes:

Dan Mazur has just posted a new review of The Good Crook (Magnolia Porter) at Webcomics Nation:

Unlike any other comic I’ve read lately — on the web or in print — “The Good Crook” is a great read. Fueled by writer-artist Magnolia Porter’s obsession with ’70s New York gangster films (especially Scorsese), the comic successfully keeps one foot in hommage to the genre, and the other in slice-of-life, domestic comedy-drama — no mean feat in any medium, and RARELY achieved in comics! The story focuses on the relationship between a Brooklyn waiter/wannabe gangster and his tough-talking, street-wise daughter, who’s languishing in the custody of her upwardly-mobile mom. Porter really knows her world and characters, making them likeable and believable. The dialogue is absolutely terrific. On top of this is her fun, fluid and expressive drawing style — which drew me to the comic in the first place — and strong color sense. Her shading of the faces is sometimes a little too eccentric and jarring, but that’s my only complaint about this standout comic.

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to our RSS feed!


Sacra-licious!

Filed under: WCN News @ 8:50 am
WebcomicsNation writes:

Travis O’Shea has just posted a new review of Jesus & The Marys at Webcomics Nation:

As I'm always telling anyone who'll listen, I love me some Jesus kitsch, so this strip leaped at me from the page.  The humor is sharp, the dialogue snappy, and Aaron Frey manages to fit a surprising amount of detail into his art considering the amount of space he has to work with.

I'd recommend this to anyone who likes their humor kitschy and tongue-in-cheek, and who isn't going to balk at a little blasphemy in their lives… ;)

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to our RSS feed!


This is story to the MAX!

Filed under: WCN News @ 8:50 am
WebcomicsNation writes:

Tim Stump has just posted a new review of The Wings of Change (Created by Mariette Rose) at Webcomics Nation:

The Wings of Change is winning the war on boredom on many fronts.

First off there is the artwork which is great. it can be so cute and yet not take the seriousness out of the story.

Then there are the characters who are so funny. Its sheer hilarity to whatch them bounce off one another. But they all have backstories to make them more people than characters.

Which brings me to the story, and it is massive! It just keeps going on and getting more complex but not too much so. and the comic has only covered two days time so far.

All in all this is simply a great comic. if only it updated more. Even still it is well worth reading.

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to our RSS feed!


6/2/2008

EV1 Servers Outage Hits the Webcomics World

Filed under: Adult Webcomics News, WCN News @ 9:34 am
Joey Manley writes:

For those who have ftp accounts at stripmatic.com to supplement their WCN accounts, or who use the domain-forwarding feature on WCN: an exploding transformer has temporarily taken out that functionality. This is also the reason some of the images on American Elf are missing. And, just coincidentally, Blank Label Comics was also hosted in that room, so they’re down, too. And AdultWebcomics.com. And so on. Will keep you apprised.

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to our RSS feed!


6/1/2008

All is full of linky-love: three questions with François Peneaud, writer of BROTHER TO DRAGONS and founding blogger of GAY COMICS LIST

Dale Lazarov writes:

Note that many of these links are NOT SAFE FOR WORK. So get with the clicky-clicky at your own risk.

Today I am asking three questions from François Peneaud, writer of BROTHER TO DRAGONS and founder and blogger at GAY COMICS LIST. François’ long-running website about gay comics educated me about gay-themed comics and homoerotic comics art by creators in multiple languages and genres. We began a correspondence a long time ago and we became fast friends; now that he’s a comics creator himself, I count on him as one of my closest colleagues in the field. Oh, I forgot to mention: he’s one of Alan Moore’s French translators! Isn’t that cool? And the first issue of Brother To Dragons? Frickin’ brilliant.

I will discontinue the gushing at this point. Here’s François bio in his own words: “I’m a French comics reader who mainly writes about LGBT-themed comics, but reads all kinds of comics (including bandes dessinées in my native language and mangas in English & French). With my Gay Comics List site, I intend to provide a large and varied view of those queer comics - that and it gives me a good excuse to be in contact with a lot of creators whose work I enjoy.

Outside of comics critique, I’ve been very happy to write three short scripts for the gay online comics anthology Young Bottoms In Love, with one included in the print collection published by editor Tim Fish. I’ve also written a short prose story for the Best Date Ever anthology from Alyson Books. The first issue of Brother to Dragons, a gay erotic fantasy I’m writing, was published by Class Comics in October 2007. It is drawn by Carlos García, a very talented newcomer. If you’re of age, have a look at the official site.

As for more personal details, I’ll say that I’m in my late 30’s and live in the South West of France with my long-suffering partner (he’s got his own obsessive hobby, so don’t pity him too much).”

François Peneaud, ©2003 Howard Cruse

First question: BROTHER TO DRAGONS has been described as “engaging”. Is there any particular set of influences or aspirations that guide your sensibility and style?

I don’t know if I have a style, but I guess I do have a sensibility. For such a comic, there are two main sets of influences, one for the way it is written, and one for the way sex is integrated in the story. In comics, I have obvious influences like Alan Moore, among others for his work on story structure, pacing and general storytelling, or Neil Gaiman, for his interest in mythology and the kind of ambiance he brings to his stories.

As for the sex part, there was one scene in one book that definitely left a mark on me: in Christopher Bram’s HOLD TIGHT, there was an explicit scene where two men make love, and the sexual relationship was woven into the plot and the characters’ development. I’m sure it wasn’t the first time something like that was done, but it just blew my mind.

The whole idea of doing a large story involving explicit sex also comes from what I’ve heard of Bill Willingham’s IRONWOOD. I haven’t read it (straight erotic comics don’t really appeal to me, I must admit), but I know it’s also fantasy-based. And of course, from Alan Moore and Melinda Gebbie’s LOST GIRLS. I remember reading the first chapters 15 years ago, when they were published by Kitchen Sink, and wishing someone would do a gay comic like that. The themes in BROTHER TO DRAGONS are definitely not the same as in LOST GIRLS, but both comics celebrate the beauty and joy of sex, as corny as that may sound. You won’t see any “pretend” rape or sex/violence association in BROTHER TO DRAGONS. That’s not what Carlos and I want to do.

I also want to say that if BROTHER TO DRAGONS is engaging, it’s largely thanks to Carlos’s work. He brings to the page a vitality, a warmth that’s entirely in keeping with the atmosphere I wanted for this comic. And he’s a very good storyteller, which enables me to write fairly dense pages.

Question no. 2: Other than its purpose as a gay erotic comic, what do you want people to take from BROTHER TO DRAGONS?

That’s hard to tell, without giving away story points. The main themes will be developed throughout the whole series, so it’s a bit too early to talk about that.But I’d say, a sense of wonder, a feeling that this story engages the reader on various levels. Yes, I hope the sex is hot (and frankly, I think you’d have to be hopelessly straight to not find it at least a little bit hot, with the way Carlos draws it), as I hope the integration of male/male sex into a larger, mythological whole—played through somewhat varied characters—is sufficiently well done to feel “right” for the readers.

I’m not mystical in the least, but the idea of male sex as being a necessary part of the survival of the world greatly appeals to me. If I have to believe in a mythology, let it be one that reflects my own experience. I think I’m going to do like Alan Moore and proclaim myself the sole believer in a religion, but for me it will the three Dracs who look kindly upon male sex. Let’s hope I won’t turn into Ron Hubbard.

Question The Third: What appeals to you about publishing the Gay Comics List website online?

At first, it was a chance to do something that wasn’t done: both the Gay League and Prism Comics (then Out in Comics) are good sites, but they were mostly writing on mainstream comics, at least at the time, and I wanted to cover a larger range of comics.On a more technical side, it was also an excuse to go and learn some PHP to code the site and its database by myself. I’m kinda geeky, I guess. While we’re in the non-gay reasons, I can say that writing in English is also something I enjoy. There’s always a different feeling when I write in a language that’s not the one I was born with; it’s hard to describe, though.

I’d been thinking of launching another site besides the fan-site I’m still doing on P. Craig Russell and Maurice Vellekoop (http://frpeneaud.free.fr), both gay artists, although Russell has done almost no gay-themed comic (you might argue that his and Gaiman’s MURDER MYSTERIES is pretty gay), and I thought, let’s combine my interests in comics and in gay-related fiction. Now, about six years later, for me it’s a multiple opportunity: I get to write (more or less) regular reviews—I love reviewing comics, and I also get to be in touch with a lot of gay artists and writers whose work I admire. Being in touch with and meeting Howard Cruse was a pretty great reward for doing this site, I can tell you.

It also seems this site is useful, since I’ve more than once been told by people from different countries, readers and artists alike, that they were very happy to find such a site. I think the site has now reached a critical mass, since I don’t always discover new comics by myself, but am often contacted by authors and publishers. And I’m always glad to review their books.

Lastly, doing this site has also lead to my having scripts drawn and published, either on the web or on paper. I got in touch with Tim Fish when I began reviewing his CAVALCADE OF BOYS comics, and I submitted a short script when he was editing YOUNG BOTTOMS IN LOVE. And I got in touch with you because of STICKY, which led to my meeting Carlos, so you know what I’m talking about. I never intended to use my contacts to further a writing “career”, but it seems things happen this way. Gay-themed comics are a small world, especially on internet, and I’m glad to be doing my part in it, whether through the GCL site or with my writing.

François Peneaud is available for writing commissions and interviews; please contact him through http://gaycomicslist.free.fr/pages/welcome.php.

Dale Lazarov, da comix pimp

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to our RSS feed!


5/30/2008

MT Interview: William G and Sahsha Andrade

Filed under: General @ 12:23 pm
Shaenon writes:

It’s About Girls, the continuing story of a guy named Icon and his oddball circle of friends and lovers, is entering its long-awaited final chapter. I talked to writer William G and artist Sahsha Andrade about their online graphic novel and their thoughts as it reaches its conclusion. William is also the creator of Bang Barstal on Graphic Smash, and Sahsha is the co-creator of Nekko and Joruba with Raymond Andrade.

(more…)

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to our RSS feed!

Next Page »
netomat hub mobile blogging





Powered by WordPress

Bad Behavior has blocked 2331 access attempts in the last 7 days.

The ComicSpace, LLC Network: ComicSpace | Webcomics Nation | OnlineComics.net | TalkAboutComics | Comixpedia.org